Mandelson: Daily Mirror had me followed by a private eye while Piers Morgan was editor

Lord Mandelson yesterday told the Leveson Inquiry that he
believed the Daily Mirror had commissioned a private investigator
to obtain his bank details and place his elderly mother under
surveillance.

In an afternoon of wide-ranging and at times grandiloquent
testimony to the press standards inquiry, the former Business
Secretary levelled his sights on a roll call of high- and
low-profile media figures.

Southern Investigations

Lord Mandelson sourced some of his most incendiary evidence from
documents which he said had been shown to him by police last year
suggesting that a south London detective agency, Southern
Investigations (SI), and its boss, Jonathan Rees, had been asked to
try to access his bank account and target members of his
family.

The peer said officers had told him the searches were ordered by
the Daily Mirror while it was being edited by Piers Morgan. The
newspaper group has previously said that some of its journalists
did use SI, but this had ceased in 1999.

No 'Faustian pact'with Murdoch titles

In his role as the Mephistopheles of New Labour, Lord Mandelson
was well-qualified to offer evidence on whether the party sought a
pact with Mr Murdoch's media empire ahead of the 1997 general
election. He insisted that although Mr Blair had sought to
"reassure" The Sun over issues like Europe, there had been no deal
between any senior Labour figure and any proprietor that they could
expect commercial favours in return for political support.

Blair and Brown were 'too close to Rupert'

Lord Mandelson said the "personal relationships" between the two
former prime ministers and Mr Murdoch had become "closer than was
wise". Not one to miss an opportunity to have a dig at the
opposition, he added he was "sure" that the same could be said for
David Cameron and his predecessors as Conservative leader.

Matthew Freud's 'reasonable parties'

The Labour grandee's talent for a smooth put-down emerged when
his cross-examination turned to his relationship with Elisabeth
Murdoch and her PR supremo husband Matthew Freud. Describing Mr
Freud as a "foul-weather friend" who acted as a "connector" rather
than a "conduit", he said Mr Freud also threw "reasonable
parties".

John Yates's 'act of chutzpah'

Mr Mandelson revealed he had considered suing former Scotland
Yard Assistant Commissioner John Yates when the officer wrote to
him accusing him of leaking information to the press at the time of
the cash-for-peerages investigation. Lord Mandelson said he
considered the letter to be "bullying" and an act of "chutzpah"
because he had been told by journalists that Mr Yates was himself
briefing reporters. Neil Garnham, counsel for the Metropolitan
Police, said the Labour peer had "no evidence" for the claim.

Rebekah's 'charm and persistence'

When asked for his opinion about the former News International
chief executive, Lord Mandelson said she was known for her
"persistence, charm and manipulative skills". He added: "Although
some people might say that's rich coming from me."